None of those guys are gonna get in the hall. I agree with Tim that Halladay would be the next.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tengoshi

None. Halladay for sure.

I would bet my real money at least one of them would make it(or some of 92/93 jays).....Halladay is still too new he might but I hope not become another Darryl Strawberry one of these days.anyway he's a Philly now.

I would bet my real money at least one of them would make it(or some of 92/93 jays).....Halladay is still too new he might but I hope not become another Darryl Strawberry one of these days.anyway he's a Philly now.

Plenty of those guys did get in, but they were bats for hire, not career Jays (Molitor, Henderson, Winfield, etc.). You can look up the voting numbers for those other guys, they've been on the ballots for a while now.

Plenty of those guys did get in, but they were bats for hire, not career Jays (Molitor, Henderson, Winfield, etc.). You can look up the voting numbers for those other guys, they've been on the ballots for a while now.

Alomar's .300 career average and .814 career OPS aren't staggering in and of themselves. It's that Alomar was able to hit that well while allegedly serving as a phenomenal defensive second baseman that made him so valuable. Whether right or wrong, Alomar is considered by many to have been one of the best glovemen at second in baseball history. That would've made him a good player had he hit even just a little bit. Instead, he hit a lot, ranking 55th all-time in hits, 78th all-time in total bases, and 100th all-time in walks. A statistic called Wins Above Replacement, which takes into consideration both offensive and defensive value, ranks Alomar's career between those of Hall of Famers Al Simmons and Jackie Robinson.

Last year was Alomar's first year on the ballot, and he fell shy of election, as many voters wanted to punish him for a 1996 incident in which he spit at umpire John Hirschbeck during an on-field argument. However, the penalty was evidently to simply not allow Alomar first-ballot election, as today he became just the 26th player ever to receive at least 90% support. He becomes the 20th second baseman to enter the Hall.